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2006-10-08 12:47:24 · 9 answers · asked by golfdylan 1 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

9 answers

(Arthur) Rimbaud, allegedly Patti Smith's favorite poet.

2006-10-08 12:52:38 · answer #1 · answered by pat z 7 · 0 0

Victor Hugo, Arthur Rimbaud, Charles Baudelaire, Louse Labe('), Ronsard, Jacques Prevert

2006-10-08 12:55:48 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

between the exciting issues approximately french literature is that there is not any one poet whom each and every severe critic has an analogous opinion is pre-eminent, and not has been. it is even confusing to make a shortlist of ten. annabella's checklist is quite the main suitable you have had so a techniques, yet even then she incorporates pierre de ronsard. ronsard is extremely particularly warm in france, yet his attractiveness has never stood that top outdoors his community us of a. (nevertheless it is nicely worth finding at yeats' 'once you're old and grey', which comes very on the factor of being an instantaneous translation of 'quand vous serez bien vieille'. in my view i think of the two are wretched poems). francois malherbe replaced into very surprisingly seen in france in the time of many of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and arguably had extra impression on french literature (which incorporates cutting-part french literature) than the different single poet. yet he's no longer lots study at present, and rightly so. victor hugo - as annabella comments - is an exciting case of an particularly super poet who wrote many products that are virtually valueless. of direction an analogous could be suggested of wordsworth in english. to get a style of hugo you're able to do nicely to study possibly the sonnet 'demain des l'aube' and 'booz endormi'. francois villon is a huge medieval poet by any standards, and various could evaluate him france' maximum suitable poet. the 'ballade des pendus' and the 'ballade des dames du temps jadis' are quite 2 of the main influential french poems (the two interior and out of doors france). charles baudelaire in some senses replaced into the 1st 'modernist' poet. a competent place first of all baudelaire is 'le cygne' (nevertheless his maximum influential piece is likely considered one of the sonnet 'correspondances' which probably gave upward push to the completed symbolist stream, or maybe to many of the ideals of modern wiccans and different neo-pagans). charles d'orleans is often underestimated by the french. 'allez vous en, allez, allez' is between the super poems of medieval europe. and then back charles additionally wrote super poetry in english (which incorporates 'my gostly fader, i me confesse').

2016-10-15 23:45:23 · answer #3 · answered by reus 4 · 0 0

Jacques Prevert

2006-10-08 13:01:10 · answer #4 · answered by lucrecia 3 · 0 0

Gilbert. There MUST be a poet with this name.

2006-10-08 12:55:33 · answer #5 · answered by mrquestion 6 · 0 0

I'm a Baudelaire admirer. He was down with Poe before most American critics were. His stuff is dark, disturbing, too.

2006-10-08 13:07:02 · answer #6 · answered by martino 5 · 0 0

Baudelaire...Le Fleur du Mal is one of the greatest series of poems in any language.

2006-10-08 12:54:47 · answer #7 · answered by kalindoscopy 2 · 0 0

Pepe Le'Pew

2006-10-08 12:54:53 · answer #8 · answered by Pundit Bandit 5 · 0 0

I have no clue but go to a bookstore and they can tell you

2006-10-08 14:02:29 · answer #9 · answered by katlvr125 7 · 0 1

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